Asthma quality of life in a Southern practice: towards a new paradigm

Authors
Citation
Bl. Wolf et G. Reed, Asthma quality of life in a Southern practice: towards a new paradigm, ANN ALLER A, 83(5), 1999, pp. 371-376
Citations number
13
Categorie Soggetti
Clinical Immunolgy & Infectious Disease
Journal title
ANNALS OF ALLERGY ASTHMA & IMMUNOLOGY
ISSN journal
10811206 → ACNP
Volume
83
Issue
5
Year of publication
1999
Pages
371 - 376
Database
ISI
SICI code
1081-1206(199911)83:5<371:AQOLIA>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
Background: Quality of life (QOL) surveys are increasingly recognized as pa rt of state-of-the-art asthma assessment. Disease-specific surveys quantita te total QOL and subscale domains which, along with changes in these measur es, suggest asthma severity and effects of intervention. Objectives: This study was conducted to (1) compare regional variation in V OL and change in QOL in an allergy practice in the South and (2) to examine if one or a set of questions relating to asthma severity could estimate QO L thereby obviating the need for a complete survey. Methods: Fifty-eight patients were administered an asthma specific quality of life (AQOL) questionnaire, the Marks et al Asthma Quality of Life survey , at baseline and surveyed in follow-up at 1 and 6 months. Additional quest ions were asked concerning bronchodilator use in a day and 1 week, missed w ork/school clays, nocturnal wakening in 1 week due to asthma, emergency roo m visits in the previous month, and past hospitalizations in the last year. Spirometry was performed at each visit. Results: Baseline AQOL is significantly (P <.05) related individually to no cturnal wakening, bronchodilator use in a day, work or school days missed, and hospitalization during the past year. A model combining these factors e xplains 49% of the variance, r(2) =.49. The AQOL score between baseline and the first month shows a significant improvement (P <.0001) and this improv ement is related (P =.002) to the reduction in nocturnal wakenings during t hat same time period. Conclusions: Specialty care intervention affected QOL similarly in the Sout hern practice compared with other regions/countries. Nocturnal wakening, br onchodilator use in a day, workdays missed, and hospitalization in the past year were all significantly correlated with AQOL. Number of nocturnal wake nings and bronchodilator use in a day may not only stratify asthma severity , they roughly stratify AQOL. The wide scatter of AQOL scores for a given i ndicator of asthma severity makes a limited combination of questions an ind icator but not yet a reliable predictor of AQOL.